This is a good question and I hope it will open discussion and attract input from many contributors. My perspective on this question relates to driving a vehicle. I think certain situations demand split second decisions/reactions and are dependent on the alertness of the operator as well as experience. Recent research has proven, and in some states legislation is enacted, that driving while sleepy/tired is as dangerous as driving under the influence (state of mind which = impaired).
Multiplying the speed of the fastest student by the slowest reaction time would give an estimate of the time it takes for the slowest student to respond. This product could be useful for trainers or educators in designing exercises or activities that cater to a wide range of student abilities, helping them optimize learning outcomes and engagement.
Sir Francis Galton is credited with pioneering the study of reaction time in the late 1800s. Galton's research laid the foundation for understanding human response to stimuli and its variations.
the fastest sense is sound, takes 8 to 10 milliseconds for the sound to travel to your mind. sight sense takes 20 to 40 milliseconds to be processed to ur brain smell is the slowest sense, since the scent waves have to go through your nose before they get to your brain.
Hold a ruler, and drop it over someone's hand and record what numbers they land on.
the measure of how fast products are made in a reaction
the fastest reaction time is of box jelly fish which can be up to 50 feets per seconds
The Fletch's
usain bolt
My Chemistry lecturer tells me that the combustion of Hydrogen and Oxygen into water is the fastest chemical reaction.
cheetah is the fastest human outrun.
neutrons are the fastest thing that created human body
it is 0.7 seconds
Bone marrow is the fastest growing tissue in the human body.
the fastest growing bone in the human body is the antlers in our body
3:43.13, ran by Hicham El Guerrouj of Morocco in 1999.
The color red is known to evoke the fastest reaction in humans.
As of January 13, 2008, the fastest mile ever run is 223.13 seconds by Hicham El Guerrouj of Morocco.